Monthly Archives: August 2010

Best guess:They’re both gonna play. Garcia will start against USM, but in grand Spurrier fashion, Shaw will see extended action, look underwhelming, and yield to Garcia for the next month or so, until Spurrier gets exasperated again. Rinse, lather and repeat throughout the year, with Garcia taking three-fourths of the snaps but yielding to Shaw for extended periods of time, and possibly a start or two at most. But Spurrier has never shown much patience with anything less than a Heisman-worthy effort from his starter, and this doesn’t seem like any place to start.

… Here are 10 wild cards that could alter the predicted course of the season between now and January:

… Georgia turnover margin (27). Bulldogs were a putrid minus-16 in that department last year. They recovered exactly two fumbles, which is why Willie Martinez is now coordinating elsewhere, and Bulldogs QBs threw 17 interceptions. Some of the turnover margin is aggressiveness on defense and some of it is prudence on offense — and some of it is just luck. After never having a year anywhere near that bad in turnover margin, Mark Richt is due for some better bounces this time around. If Georgia gets back into plus-turnover margin on the season, it could well win the SEC East.

At least.

(By the way, make sure you catch Forde’s note about former Vanderbilt coach Woody Widenhofer – one of the weirder “where are they now?” stories you’ll see.)

There is so much stoopid from Adelson in this “debate” with Chris Low that I wonder if she’s displaying any more sincerity in what she writes than what we’re subjected to in a typical Mark May rant.

If you’re gonna try to gin up some controversy, can’t you do better than the old, tired “it’s not the Broncos’ fault nobody wants a piece of them” line the week Virginia Tech is scheduled to play them?

And you have to love this exchange:

Chris Low: You’re right, the WAC is the conference Boise State plays in. That’s just the way it is. But it’s not even close to playing an SEC schedule, which is why a one-loss SEC champion should always get the nod over any unbeaten team from the WAC, Mountain West or any of the non-BCS conferences for that matter. I like your hoops analogy, but the difference is that Boise State isn’t carving its way through powerhouses in football en route to the championship game a la Butler in hoops a year ago. Butler beat Syracuse, Kansas State and Michigan State just to get to Duke in the title game. Boise State closes this season with Fresno State, Nevada and Utah State.

Andrea Adelson: Fresno State and Nevada have been two of the best WAC teams in football. But that is beside the point…

Great article by Tim Tucker on Georgia’s antitrust suit against the NCAA. Can you imagine what that 1980 season would have been like under the current broadcast arrangements?

Pat Dye on the SEC: “If you don’t win at Alabama, they ought to fire your ass. Same thing at Tennessee, Florida and Georgia. I’d even say that’s the case at South Carolina and Auburn. Oh, and LSU and Arkansas.”(h/t The Wiz of Odds)

“Supply and demand is part of it,” said Farmer, who worked at Georgia Southern from 1982-99. “Right now there’s more of a demand than there is a supply. I know that’s an awful lot of money to pay out to play a football game. But I think the other story would be how much does a Georgia or a Sooth Carolina make at a home football game. … If it wasn’t economically feasible for them, they wouldn’t pay it.”

The Next Big Thing in college football scheduling will be an old-school, fan-friendly concept: Playing conference rivals more, not less.

The Pac-10 has played nine conference games for a while, and it appears the Big Ten and Big 12 will soon follow. The trend could affect the national championship race, television contracts, the budgets of smaller schools, and bowl eligibility.

Fewer open slots in BCS-conference schedules means a drop in demand for opponents who will accept a one-and-done arrangement. That means one of two things will result: either appearance fees will decline, or the mid-major conferences will do some shoring up of their own to cut the supply and keep the costs up.

… If the Big Ten shifts to nine games, MAC Commissioner Jon Steinbrecher said his league should strongly consider going to nine as well.

“The Big Ten is going to have one fewer non-conference game to schedule,” Steinbrecher said. “Does that mean one fewer game against us they schedule, or one other non-conference game (not against the MAC)? That’s what we don’t know right now.”

Delany said the Big Ten has “pushed it about as far as we can” in paying for increasingly expensive “buy” games.

Conference USA is also considering a nine-game schedule. Many league coaches believe C-USA hasn’t had an undefeated team since 1998 because of difficult non-conference schedules.

Either way, the end result would be less money flowing downstream. That’s not a happy development if you’re a school on the receiving end.

“It depends on what day it is, I guess,” Richt said. “As of Friday or Saturday, we were feeling like DeAngelo would start at nose. … DeAngelo could play end and (Justin Anderson) and Kwame (Geathers) could move up in a heartbeat, too.”

It’s going to be a real contrast in studies this year – barring injuries, stability ought to be the order of the day on offense, while the defense looks to be in a state of flux for some time.

Nah, it’s not exactly 2007 all over again, but a look at the Gators depth chart reveals an astounding seventeen true freshman listed (granted, some of that figure is the result of the rather liberal use of “OR” – the latest cheezy trend in depth charting). The reason that’s not entirely a rerun is because none of them are listed as starters.

It does make you wonder what’s going on with their sophomore class, though, as it seems to be largely supplanted by the newcomers.

I don’t wish injuries on any team, but I will be curious to see what happens if Florida suffers its share (indeed, that’s happened already to some extent on the offensive line).

One last thing: anybody see where that short yardage offense will be coming from?

Quote Of The Day

“Being a student at Georgia and playing ball, I’ve definitely grown, widened my horizons and experienced things I never thought I would. I feel like I’ve grown on and off the field, and the university prepared me for that. I’ve done some awesome things and met some awesome people. I’ll definitely be back to finish my schoolwork, because that was a big priority for me and my family and weighed heavily on my decision. I know football won’t last forever. It’ll be great to come back and get that degree, so I can tell my kids about it one day.” — Roquan Smith, AJ-C, 3/7/18